1. Cargo insurance for insureds who ship goods on a regular basis. The contract covers all sendings within the scope of the policy at agreed rates. The insured must declare each shipment to facilitate the issue of certificates. Premiums are debited monthly or quarterly. The policy is not subject to a fixed term but can be cancelled subject to 30 days notice. 2. Marine reinsurance facility whereby the reinsurer takes a share of any business of a defined type that is offered by the cedant. It works in the same way as the open cover for cargoes (see 1. above).
Tag: UK
Open market
A term referring to a risk placed in the open market as opposed to one that is covered under a binding authority, line slip or treaty.
Open market option
Pension scheme member’s option to use his fund to buy an annuity from any insurance company in the open market. The member is able to search for the best available annuity rate.
Open pilot warranty
Aviation clause setting out the minimum acceptable qualifications for a pilot not named on the policy. A named pilot or one who ‘meets the open’ affirms to the insured that the pilot’s use of the aircraft will not invalidate the cover. It does not automatically give cover to the pilot under the liability section of the policy.
Operating ratio
A ratio that monitors an insurer’s overall trading performance. It has three components: (a) the loss ratio, i.e. total losses and claims handling costs as a percentage of net premium income; (b) the expense ratio, i.e. underwriting expenses as a percentage of premium income; (c) investment income ratio, i.e. net investment income on funds contributed by policyholders as a percentage of net premium earned. The operating ratio is the result of deducting the investment income ratio from the sum of the loss ratio and expense ratio.
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The sum of the combined ratio plus investment income.
Operational risk/operational risk insurance
The risk of direct or indirect loss resulting from inadequate or failed internal processes, people and systems or from external events’ (Basel Committee on Banking Supervision 2001). The definition includes the legal risk but excludes strategic and reputational risk. It encompasses: ‘people’ risks (ineffective management); internal and external fraud; failure to comply with laws and regulations; damage to physical assets; business disruption through IT failure; transaction processing failures; and outsourcing weaknesses. The move towards operational risk management is FSAdriven. Firms will have to comply with the policy on systems and control from 2004. Financial businesses are able to insure against the risk by purchasing a ‘basket’ insurance, with fewer exclusions, over and above the more traditional insurances. The basket includes cover under: professional indemnity; directors’ and officers’ liability; broad form me and computer crime; unauthorised trading; employment practices liability; pension trust liability; organisational liability; broad form external fraud.
Operative clause
defines the class and nature of business covered by a specific reinsurance treaty.
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The clause in an Insurance Policy that sets out the circumstances in which the Insurers are prepared to make claim payments.
Operative clause/insuring clause
clause Policy clause that (subject to conditions) sets out the insurer’s responsibilities in terms of losses or events in respect of which he will have to provide an indemnity or payout under a benefit policy.